Why Chicago Zillow Listings Disappeared
Chicago-area home listings vanished from Zillow and Trulia after Midwest Real Estate Data, known as MRED, cut off Zillow’s access to its listing feed. This triggered a steep drop from nearly 5,000 listings to about 1,700 in roughly a day.
Because MRED controls a large share of Chicago-area MLS data, the cutoff sharply reduced listing visibility on Zillow and Trulia. Redfin and Realtor.com still showed roughly 5,000 to 8,000 Chicago listings during the disruption.
The homes were not removed from the market. They remained active on other channels, including Redfin, Realtor.com, Compass.com, and MLS-connected sites.
Consumer Disruption
The immediate effect fell on buyers whose search behavior depended heavily on Zillow. Many properties appeared to vanish overnight, creating confusion about what was actually available. The disruption also landed as Zillow was already facing scrutiny over referral practices tied to its mortgage business.
The episode showed that database access rules can directly shape public inventory displays and consumer transparency in local housing markets.
What Zillow Claims Against MRED and Compass
Following the sudden listing blackout, Zillow’s court filing casts the dispute as an antitrust fight over who controls access to a key stream of housing data.
Zillow alleges MRED and Compass engaged in a Sherman Act group boycott by threatening Chicagoland listing access unless Zillow changed how it displayed Compass private listings nationwide.
The complaint describes listing data as a critical input for competition and says the pressure amounted to data coercion directed at a rival.
Recent scrutiny of similar disputes reflects broader concerns under antitrust laws that control over listings can reduce competition and limit consumer choice.
Alleged Conduct
Zillow says MRED repeatedly warned that Chicago listings could be cut off.
It also alleges Compass ended direct feed agreements on May 8, removing an alternative data pipeline and increasing leverage.
According to the filing, the combined conduct was a form of market manipulation meant to force acceptance of private listings beyond Chicago.
Zillow seeks damages, fees, and an order blocking enforcement of the disputed rules.
How a Judge Restored Chicago Listings
In an emergency ruling on May 22, 2026, U.S. District Judge John Tharp Jr. granted Zillow immediate relief against Midwest Real Estate Data.
The judge’s intervention came after MRED had cut off Zillow’s Chicago-area listing access earlier that week.
Feed Restoration Ordered
The court issued a temporary restraining order, also described in reports as a preliminary injunction, requiring feed restoration at once.
That order restored Zillow’s access to Chicago-area IDX and VOW listing feeds.
It also reconnected licensed data for its consumer websites.
Prior Status Quo Reinstated
Legally, the ruling reversed the cutoff and restored the prior status quo while the larger case proceeds.
It did not decide the ownership dispute over listing data control.
Instead, it temporarily guaranteed that Chicago-area homes were visible again to the public across MRED’s northern Illinois market.
What Chicago Listings Returned to Zillow
Thousands of MRED-sourced listings reappeared on Zillow after the restored feed brought back inventory that had vanished from Chicago market searches.
Active for-sale homes led the return. Single-family houses, condominiums, townhomes, and suburban Chicagoland properties again appeared in search pages and map results.
The restored visibility supported clearer neighborhood trends and sharper pricing impacts for buyers and sellers.
What Reappeared
| Listing type | Where visible again | Market effect |
|---|---|---|
| Single-family homes | Search pages | Broader buyer view |
| Condos and townhomes | Map results | Better comparison |
| Suburban listings | Saved searches | Wider coverage |
| Agent-listed MLS homes | Alerts and pages | Restored exposure |
Property pages tied to prior MRED syndication became accessible again. Search counts rose, while saved searches and alerts reflected more complete inventory.
Coverage remained limited to MRED-participating listings and normal data-refresh timing.
What Happens Next in the Zillow-MRED Case
Amid the partial court win, the Zillow-MRED fight now moves into a more consequential phase centered on a preliminary injunction and the antitrust claims pending in federal court in Chicago.
The temporary restraining order restores listing-feed access for now, but it does not decide whether MRED and Compass unlawfully coordinated pressure on Zillow’s marketing policy.
Key Legal Pressure Points
Further filings are expected to define how broadly Zillow can enforce its listing standards in ZIP codes touched by recent MRED activity.
Discovery and motion practice are likely to examine communications, market power, and whether feed restrictions functioned as a group boycott under the Sherman Act.
Market Stakes and Broader Effects
The written order may sharpen the immediate rules, with regulatory implications for MLS control, portal competition, and listing visibility.
Investor reactions are likely to track any signs of prolonged disruption.
Assessment
The ruling temporarily restored Zillow’s access to many Chicago-area listings, easing a disruption that had limited market visibility.
The decision did not resolve the underlying dispute between Zillow, MRED, and Compass. That fight remains active and consequential for brokers, sellers, and buyers.
As the case proceeds, the outcome could reshape how listing data is shared, displayed, and controlled across one of the nation’s largest housing markets.
It could also carry broader implications for platform access and competitive power.













